VIRGINIA — With Election Day fast approaching and this swing state looming large in the contests for both the White House and the Senate, there’s a chance for a large-scale outbreak in the “voting wars”—the running battle over the way elections are conducted.
In recent weeks, in fact, there have already been two skirmishes over those issues—one involving a Republican operative accused of throwing out voter registration forms, another in which the son of a Democratic Congressman was taped discussing how to commit voter fraud. Both stories have attracted national coverage, but some smaller newsrooms here did a decent job of holding their own. Let’s take a look.
The incident of the Dumpster-bound registration forms occurred in Harrisonburg, in the Shenandoah Valley. A Pennsylvania man named Colin Small hired by the state GOP to register voters faces multiple charges after eight registration forms were found in a trash bin.
One of the early media mentions of this story actually came on Oct. 17 from a Virginia-based political blogger, who cited both a Facebook post and a local TV account. But once the news was out there and the investigation turned into an arrest, the crew at Harrisonburg’s Daily News-Record did strong work in making the story their own.
Jeremy Hunt’s report on Oct. 19 on the arrest of the worker was solid and thorough, a nice job of deadline reporting. Follow-up coverage was also thorough and informative, including a report from Preston Knight on the state attorney general, a Republican, taking over the investigation, and Democrats asking for a look by U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder. There’s good work here in laying out both the political players and the complex backstory, as this passage from Knight’s story shows (unfortunately, live links to the coverage are no longer available):
The Republican Party of Virginia contracted with Pinpoint to conduct voter registration efforts.
Some of the Pinpoint employees, including Small, had worked for Strategic Allied in Virginia until Sept. 27, when the Republican National Committee fired that registration firm over fraud allegations in Florida.
Small continued to work for the Virginia GOP as an employee of Pinpoint in Harrisonburg until his firing by the state party after his arrest last week.
Rockingham County Sheriff Bryan Hutcheson said his office does not believe widespread fraud took place. Authorities have not disclosed a possible motive for last week’s dumping, but a source said Small seems to have missed the registration deadline to turn them in, panicked and threw them away.
In Virginia, third-party groups that register voters must turn forms in to registrars within 15 days. All the eligible voters whose forms were tossed—five forms are from county residents—can still vote Nov. 6.
Whatever Small’s motives, this episode seems likely to exacerbate fears on the left that the GOP wants to suppress the vote. The second incident—which was at once more and less of a story—plays into fears on the right about voter fraud.
That series of events got underway with the release of a video showing Patrick Moran, son of Democratic Rep. Jim Moran, entertaining queries from a volunteer who was hell-bent on voter fraud. The volunteer turned out to be working for right-wing activist James O’Keefe’s Project Veritas, who was taping Moran surreptitiously. (CJR has written about O’Keefe many times in the past; here are a few.) Patrick Moran resigned from his post as field director in his father’s reelection campaign soon after the video was posted on Oct. 24.
Moran’s district is in the D.C. suburbs, which means that one of the local papers is The Washington Post—hardly a small outlet. The Post’s Errin Haines turned in a measured dispatch on the resignation, noting up high that the younger Moran was the target of a sting and that in the video he “does not explicitly advocate or condone the worker’s suggestion”—but also that he eventually offers some advice and tells the worker, “I respect your initiative.”
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Wow, how did you do that report on Strategic Allied Consulting without mentioning the name Nathan Sproul?
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/05/us/politics/nathan-sproul-a-republican-operative-long-trailed-by-voter-fraud-claims.html?pagewanted=all
"The voter registration fraud allegations against Mr. Sproul’s companies seem to fit a pattern.
In Nevada, a complaint filed last month with the secretary of state’s office alleged that a woman, Cathy Sue Yancey, was told to tear up a form in which she registered as a Democrat and fill out another one without marking her party affiliation..
The election forms were traced to a Sproul operation. Similar allegations prompted an investigation by the Oregon Department of Justice in 2004.
In that case, a couple told the police in Roseburg that they had been approached by a woman outside a Walmart who asked them to register to vote. The husband, John Gomez, filled out a card registering as a Republican. His wife, Katheline, registered as a Democrat.
About a month later, Mr. Gomez received a ballot in the mail, but his wife did not, the Oregon authorities said. Her registration form seemed to have evaporated. Investigators determined that the woman who solicited the couple had been paid by Sproul & Associates."
http://www.alternet.org/story/20194/republican_dirty_tricks
"Sproul's dirty tricks may have finally caught up with him, though far from his stomping grounds in Arizona. In Oregon, Sproul's firm is being investigated by the state attorney general and could face a class-C felony, punishable by five years in jail, for allegedly altering and destroying voter registration forms. And in Nevada, state election officials have just launched an investigation into whether Sproul's Voters Outreach of America destroyed the registration forms of exclusively Democratic voters."
As for the Moran stuff? Typical 'both sides do it' false equivalence.
#1 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Thu 1 Nov 2012 at 01:23 PM
I was wondering how grudging CJR would be in acknowledging the effectiveness of O'Keefe's latest sting. You came through.
ABC News used to put John Quinones in charge of going out to 'conservative' venues (NASCAR races, i.e.) and rying to provoke oridnary people, not the children of Congressmen or NPR functionaries, into making 'bigoted' statements which ABC News could then trumpet on one of its 'newsmagazines'. This stuff is mainly intended to stir up 'identity politics' activists, an important constituency of the Democratic Party, with the side effect of making the usual urban and campus-based demographic (the chattering class base) continue feeling superior to the masses. If CJR can tell me exactly how that is different that what O'Keefe does, if less successful, I'd like to hear it. You can't so you won't. Everyone's a journalist of some sort in the age of YouTube.
Because O'Keefe is 'right-wing', CJR cannot bring itself to acknowledge his effectiveness as the kind of guerrilla journalist that used to be an aspiration of the 'alternative' press. (The latter get taken up by the establishment press pretty easily, one notes.) If O'Keefe had been 'left-wing', he would have been hired to work for one of the networks by now, and would be a folk hero to CJR staffers.
#2 Posted by Mark Richard, CJR on Thu 1 Nov 2012 at 04:57 PM